6,562 research outputs found

    Dissemination of innovative teaching and learning practice : the global studio

    No full text
    This project aims to disseminate teaching and learning resources from an innovative programme called the Global Studio to the ADM-HEA community. The area of innovation developed in the Global Studio was to link student teams across the globe in ‘designer’ and ‘client’ roles in order to undertake a product development project. This built on and extended the learning philosophy of learning in and through doing provided in a more traditional design studio. Throughout the project students worked in geographically distributed work groups in order to provide them with experience in using skills that would enable them to work successfully in distributed design teams

    Takeda, Bean

    No full text
    Photograph of Takeda family Christmas card. Each member of the family is pictured inside a Christmas light. Negative scan.In 1922, Kinso Ninomiya opened the Ninomiya Studio in Little Tokyo, Los Angeles. Due to Executive Order 9066 in 1942, the studio was forced to close but was reopened by Kinso and his son, Elwin Ichiro, in 1949. The studio operated in Little Tokyo until its final closing in 1986. The Ninomiya Studio Collection captures slices of Japanese American life in Los Angeles from the 1950s through the 1980s. The collection contains formal portraiture and candid photography in black and white and color as well as commercial photography for local businesses and reproductions of older photographs. The negatives come in a variety of sizes, including 8 x 10 inch negatives and panoramic negatives on Cirkut film. Each negative scanned has been selected out of multiple negatives and prints from a set. The title of the negative scan reflects the purchaser's name

    Takeda, Bean

    No full text
    Photograph of Takeda family Christmas card. Each member of the family is pictured inside a Christmas light. Negative scan.In 1922, Kinso Ninomiya opened the Ninomiya Studio in Little Tokyo, Los Angeles. Due to Executive Order 9066 in 1942, the studio was forced to close but was reopened by Kinso and his son, Elwin Ichiro, in 1949. The studio operated in Little Tokyo until its final closing in 1986. The Ninomiya Studio Collection captures slices of Japanese American life in Los Angeles from the 1950s through the 1980s. The collection contains formal portraiture and candid photography in black and white and color as well as commercial photography for local businesses and reproductions of older photographs. The negatives come in a variety of sizes, including 8 x 10 inch negatives and panoramic negatives on Cirkut film. Each negative scanned has been selected out of multiple negatives and prints from a set. The title of the negative scan reflects the purchaser's name

    The Creative Studio Practice of Contemporary Dance Music Sampling Composers

    No full text
    This article seeks to investigate some of the considerations that inform and help to determine the creative studio practice of contemporary sampling composers. Collaborative writing and production, specifically the co-opted collaboration implicit in using samples, will be assessed to consider those aspects of the production process which the participants consider to be authorial. These considerations include acts of listening, selecting and editing. In examining these matters this paper places emphasis on how sampling composers actively constrain their options in order to promote a creative relationship with their musical material. Techniques such as, firstly, traditional sample manipulation, secondly, the use of a sample as an initial building block for a composition from which the sample is then removed and, finally, live performance in the studio which is subsequently cut up and treated as a sample, will be discussed. Case studies, in the form of semi-structured interviews with sampling composers, will be drawn upon to assess approaches to and views about these forms of studio compositio

    Designing 21st Century Standard Ware: The Cultural Heritage of Leach and the Potential Applications of Digital Technologies

    No full text
    This practice-based research investigates the potential applications of digital manufacturing technologies in the design and production of hand-made tableware at the Leach Pottery. The methodology for the research establishes an approach grounded in my previous experience as a maker that is informed by an open, experimental, emergent, and responsive framework based on Naturalistic Inquiry. A critical contextual review describes the cultural heritage of Leach which, for the purposes of the research, is developed through the Leach Pottery as a significant site, the historical production of the iconic Leach Standard Ware and the contemporary production of Leach Tableware. This is followed by an examination of Potter’s Tools in the Leach production environment, and a review of makers’ digital ceramic practice. The contextual review is followed by an explication of ‘standards’ presented through visual lineages of Standard Ware and Leach Tableware to define ‘standard’ at a design (macro) level, followed by an examination of how ‘standard’ operates at a making (micro level) level. This chapter presents new knowledge in relation to defining the visual field of Leach Pottery tableware production and its standards of design. A chapter focussed on practice presents the outcomes and analysis of my engagement with digital manufacturing technologies which resulted in the development of new tools to support Leach Tableware production and the interrogation of Leach forms, in different mediums, which led to the creation of Digital-Analogue Leach forms. The practice culminated in the design and development of new 21st century Standard Ware: a range of 9 forms, called Echo of Leach, that were developed by myself using digital and analogue methods: the designs were realised by myself, the Leach Studio, and a further four makers. The outcomes of the research were presented in a three month exhibition at the Leach Pottery in 2013. The conclusions of the research draw on the key points raised in the analysis of the practice and relate these to the approaches to making pottery that are highlighted in the cultural heritage of Leach in the contextual review. These are also discussed in relation to ways in which these findings could be taken forward into development of knowledge about Standard Ware, especially in a broader studio pottery context

    Bean, Ruth & Jessie

    No full text
    Photograph from the C.R. Savage Portrait Studio. Name associated with the photograph: Ruth Bean; Jessie Bea

    Postcard, Spinning Brass into Gold, at Studio@620 in St. Petersburg, Florida

    No full text
    A promotional postcard for Spinning Brass into Gold, an intimate evening with renowned author Michael Connelly, held at Studio@620 on November 19, 2008. The event served as a benefit for the studio\u27s educational initiatives, offering attendees access to one of the greatest mystery writers of the time and including a copy of his newly released thriller, The Brass Verdict.https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/bdj_studioat620_postcards/1352/thumbnail.jp

    Postcard, Project Unspeakable at Studio@620 in St. Petersburg, Florida

    No full text
    A promotional postcard for Project Unspeakable, a staged reading directed by Bonnie Agan, with a discussion featuring author James W. Douglass about his book JFK and the Unspeakable: How He Died and Why It Matters. The event, held at Studio@620, delves into the role of Unspeakable by Thomas Merton in the assassinations of John F. Kennedy, Malcolm X, Martin Luther King, Jr., and Robert Kennedy.https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/bdj_studioat620_postcards/1123/thumbnail.jp

    Postcard, Mark Haber: An Evening of Readings at Studio@620 in St. Petersburg, Florida

    No full text
    A promotional postcard for An Evening of Readings with author Mark Haber, hosted by Summerfolk Press and Studio@620. The event featured the debut of his newly published collection, Deathbed Conversions, a series of fifteen short stories exploring the absurdity of existence. The evening included a reception, readings, and a book signing.https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/bdj_studioat620_postcards/1238/thumbnail.jp

    Postcard, Black and Blue at Studio@620 in St. Petersburg, Florida

    No full text
    A promotional postcard for Black and Blue, an exhibition and book signing by author and artist Andra Douglas at Studio@620. The event showcases mixed-media artwork inspired by Douglas’s experiences in professional women’s tackle football, exploring themes of resilience and empowerment.https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/bdj_studioat620_postcards/1286/thumbnail.jp
    corecore